A. 1895 - Bill Text

A1895 Morelle (MS) No Same as

Civil Practice Law and Rules

TITLE....Relates to the applicability of certain provisions with respect to persons injured in the use of scaffolding and other devices for use by employees



01/14/09 referred to judiciary



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MORELLE, DESTITO, SCHIMMINGER, V. LOPEZ, MAGEE, CHRISTENSEN, CYMBROWITZ, GALEF, ROBINSON, FIELDS, SEMINERIO, PERALTA; M-S: Hooper, Koon, Lupardo, McEneny, Towns, Weisenberg

Add S1414, CPLR

Relates to the applicability of certain provisions with respect to persons injured in the use of scaffolding and other devices for use by employees.

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STATE OF NEW YORK

________________________________________________________________________



1895



2009-2010 Regular Sessions



IN ASSEMBLY



January 14, 2009

___________



Introduced by M. of A. MORELLE, DESTITO, SCHIMMINGER, V. LOPEZ, MAGEE,

CHRISTENSEN, CYMBROWITZ, GALEF, ROBINSON, FIELDS, SEMINERIO, PERALTA

-- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. HOOPER, KOON, LUPARDO, McENENY,

TOWNS, WEISENBERG -- read once and referred to the Committee on Judi-

ciary



AN ACT to amend the civil practice law and rules, in relation to the

applicability of certain provisions with respect to persons injured in

the use of scaffolding and other devices for use by employees



The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-

bly, do enact as follows:



1 Section 1. The civil practice law and rules is amended by adding a new

2 section 1414 to read as follows:

3 § 1414. Applicability to certain actions. 1. In any action or

4 proceeding to recover damages for personal injury, injury to property,

5 or wrongful death pursuant to section two hundred forty, subdivisions

6 one through five of section two hundred forty-one, or section two

7 hundred forty-one-a of the labor law, where safety equipment or devices

8 have been made available, and a person employed or otherwise entitled to

9 the protection of the provisions of such section has failed to follow

10 safety instruction or safe work practices in accordance with training

11 provided, or failed to utilize provided safety equipment or devices, or

12 engaged in a criminal act or was impaired by the use of drugs or alco-

13 hol, and such failure, act or impairment is a proximate cause of an

14 injury to such person, the conduct attributable to such person shall not

15 bar recovery, but the amount of damages otherwise recoverable shall be

16 determined in accordance with section fourteen hundred eleven of this

17 article to the extent that such conduct relates to the commission of a

18 criminal act, impairment caused by the use of drugs or alcohol, the

19 failure to use safety equipment or devices, the failure to comply with

20 instructions or training regarding the use of safety equipment or

21 devices or the failure to otherwise comply with safe work practices in



EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets

[ ] is old law to be omitted.

LBD04922-01-9





A. 1895 2



1 accordance with safety training programs provided to such person. Such

2 training programs shall include, but shall not be limited to, courses in

3 construction safety and health certified by the United States Occupa-

4 tional Safety and Health Administration or the department of labor.

5 2. Nothing contained in this section shall be deemed to impose or

6 create liability under such sections of the labor law referred to in

7 subdivision one of this section, where a person employed or otherwise

8 entitled to the protection of the provisions of such sections has failed

9 to follow safety instructions or safe work practices in accordance with

10 training provided, or failed to utilize provided safety equipment or

11 devices, or engaged in a criminal act or was impaired by the use of

12 drugs or alcohol, and such failure, act or impairment is the sole proxi-

13 mate cause of an injury to such person.

14 § 2. This act shall take effect immediately and shall apply to all

15 causes of actions accruing on or after such date.





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NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY

MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION

submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)





BILL NUMBER: A1895



SPONSOR: Morelle (MS)



TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the civil practice law and rules, in

relation to the applicability of certain provisions with respect to

persons injured in the use of scaffolding and other devices for use by

employees





PURPOSE: To establish a comparative negligence standard for claims

under Labor Law sections 240 and 241 with respect to a recalcitrant

worker.





SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Amends the Civil Practice Law and Rules to add

a new Section 1414. This section applies a comparative negligence stand-

ard as provided for in CPLR 1411 with respect to actions for personal

injury, property damage or wrongful death arising under Labor Law

Sections 240 and 241 to the extent the conduct relates to the following:

a criminal act, use of drugs or alcohol, failure of the employee to use

safety devices furnished at the job site, failure to comply with employ-

er instructions regarding the use of safety devices at the job site, or

failure of the employee to comply with safe work practices in accord

with safety training programs provided by the employer.





JUSTIFICATION: The construction industry is currently facing a

liability insurance crisis. Contractors are receiving insurance cancel-

lation notices and being forced to seek coverage from non-admitted

carriers with exclusions from coverages at exorbitant rate increases.

Many contractors are concerned that existing coverage no matter how

limited will also evaporate from the market. This insurance coverage

crisis is especially difficult for smaller contractors. Many insurance

carriers who have withdrawn from the market are citing the costs associ-

ated with absolute liability pursuant to the so called safe place to

work law provided for in Labor Law Sections 240 and 241.



This legislation attempts to take a limited approach to this problem by

applying comparative negligence standards to a recalcitrant worker. This

approach falls significantly short of repeal but attempts to contain the

costs of absolute liability in a fair manner by making an employee who

directly contributes to his injury liable for the portion of fault

assessed by a jury for his own conduct. This comparative negligence

standard is only applied in limited circumstances such as commission of

a criminal act, use of drugs or alcohol, failure to use safety devices

at the job site, failure to comply with employer instructions regarding

the use of safety devices at the job site or failure of the employee to

comply with safe work practices in accord with a safety program provided

by the employer. The latter provision encourages employers to afford

training certified by OSHA or the State Labor Department to its employ-

ees.



This bill does not take away the right of any injured worker to sue.

Rather it makes a recalcitrant worker responsible for his own conduct.

This approach encourages workplace safety by encouraging workers to take

responsibility for their own safety. There are conflicting court cases

that apply the doctrine of recalcitrant worker and this bill would clar-

ify worker responsibility. This bill would establish a uniform standard

for the application of the recalcitrant worker doctrine. It also is a

modest change in the absolute liability of the safe place to work stat-

ute that remains the only such statute in place among the other 49

states.



LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:



A7213/S1710 of 2003-2004.

A2946/S3823 of 2005-2006. A.2528 of 2007/2008 - held in labor.





FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.





EFFECTIVE DATE: Immediately.